John Ringold
Presumably, Lacy moved his family to the District—as other Arlington landowners did when Union troops overtook their land and dwelling—because Lacy submitted a petition to the federal government’s Southern Claims Commission to receive payment for the value of his enslaved property upon DC’s emancipation of enslaved people in April 1862. In his petition for remuneration for Ringold, Lacy described Ringold as 40 years old and “dark, about five feet nine and a half,” and “stout build, well made and healthy.” In addition, Lacy wrote that Ringold “is a valuable servant, being a first-rate garden and field hand, an excellent wagoner, and may be trusted with any duty connected with a farm or garden.”
In July 1863, the District listed Ringold as 44 years old and among those residents subject to military duty in the District—that is, to fight for the Union during the Civil War. He may have trained with the 1st District of Columbia Colored Volunteers, formed in May 1863, the first black regiment formally mustered into service (later designated as the 1st United States Colored Troops).
In the 1870 Census, Ringold was listed as a District resident, 50 years old, working as a brickmaker. Listed with him is his family, which he likely began establishing during his time in Arlington: Ann M. Ringold, 34, born in Virginia, whose profession is “keeping house”; Charles Ringold, 12, born in Virginia, a “laborer”; John, 10, born in Virginia, who works “in brickyard”; and three younger children, Edward, 8, and Elijah, 4, both born in DC and Zachariah, 1, born in Virginia, all listed as “at home.”
By 1880, John Ringold, who would have been 60, was no longer listed in the census, and his wife Ann, who would have been 44. But his children Edward, 18, a “laborer”; Elijah, 14, who “works in the brickyard”; and Zach, 12, “at home,” are still living as a family, with presumably John’s second wife, Maria Ringgold, 40, a “laundress” born in Virginia. She, along with each member of the family, is listed as “mulatto” and with a different spelling of their last name. John Ringold’s children, Charles, who would have been 22, and John, who would have been 20, are not recorded as living at home by this time, and two new children appear in the records: May, 8, and Enoch, 4, both born in DC, indicating that John Ringold at least lived to father them in 1878, between the age of 54 and 58.
—Sue Eisenfeld
Sources:
Bill of Sale, Benjamin F. Weeden to Robert B. Moss. (1839, May 11). U.S. Slave Owner Petitions, 1862-1863, Washington, DC. Retrieved from Ancestry.com.
Ringold lease receipts, 1843, from Robert B. Moss to Benjamin F. Weeden. U.S. Slave Owner Petitions, 1862-1863, Washington, DC. Retrieved from Ancestry.com.
U.S. Marriage Records, Mary Jane Causin to Benjamin F. Weeden. Retrieved from Ancestry.com.
Schedule 1 – Free Inhabitants in Alexandria, Virginia. (1860, July). Retrieved from US 1860 Federal Census from Ancestry.com.
Schedule 4 – Production of Agriculture in Alexandria, Virginia (1860, September 15). Retrieved from US Selected Federal Census Non-Population Schedules, 1850-1880, Ancestry.com.
Petition for Compensation (1862). U.S. Slave Owner Petitions, 1862-1863, Washington, DC, William B. Lacy Claim. Retrieved from Ancestry.com.
Schedule II – Consolidated List of all persons of Class II, subject to do military duty in the Seventh Congressional District of Columbia. (1863, June-July). U.S. Civil War Draft Registration Records, 1863-1865. Ancestry.com.
Schedule 1 – Inhabitants of the Seventh Ward, Washington District of Columbia (1870, June 11). Retrieved from US 1870 Federal Census, Ancestry.com
Schedule 1 – Inhabitants of Washington City, District of Columbia (1880, June 5). Retrieved from US 1880 Federal Census, Ancenstry.com.
Washington, DC Genealogy Trails. (2023.) Retrieved from http://genealogytrails.com/washdc/marriages/marr1841to1845.html